When Mark Levin decided to write his book "The Liberty Amendments"
to advocate a convention to propose a series of amendments to the U.S.
Constitution, he may not have realized how quickly and deeply his profound
idea would resonate. But throughout the nation, people are inclining their
ears.

The first obstacle Levin faced was the widespread misconception
that he is calling for a constitutional convention that could be hijacked
by enemies of our founding principles and converted into a forum to hammer
the final nails into our constitutional republic by fundamentally and
radically changing our founding document.

In fact, Levin's proposal couldn't be more at odds with that
misperception. He is, first and foremost, a constitutionalist. His goal is
neither to eradicate nor to substantially change the Framers' blueprint
for government. It's to restore it with specific, defined amendments
intended to re-establish the proper balance between the power of the
government and the liberty of its citizens, with due emphasis on the
latter.

Levin is not arrogantly presuming to improve on the ineffable work
of the Framers in crafting "the most wonderful work ever struck off at a
given time by the brain and purpose of man" but humbly calling on his
fellow patriots to recognize that we have strayed from the principles they
enshrined in the Constitution and join him in his effort to advance the
necessary correctives.

The Framers didn't meet in Philadelphia in the 18th century with
the burning desire to pass super-legislation to codify an ideological
political agenda to establish fundamental rights in health care or
education, and they certainly didn't want to guarantee, by law, certain
economic outcomes.

They met ostensibly to amend the Articles of Confederation and
ended up scrapping it entirely and replacing it with our Constitution.

They were determined to design a system of government that would
maximize individual liberties. That would require establishing a
government strong enough to protect citizens from domestic and foreign
threats but no stronger than that, for they knew that historically,
unchecked, tyrannical governments had been the enemies of freedom.

Their challenge was to find that optimal balance between the power
of government and individual liberties, so they created a system that
divides and diffuses power between the national and state governments
(through a system of federalism) and between coequal, competing branches
of the federal government (the separation of powers), which hold one
another in check.

It was not the affirmative granting of rights that would establish
liberties -- many meaningless constitutions have paid lip service to that
endeavor -- but the imposition of defined, specific and enforceable
limitations on the federal government.

We must not lose sight of the fact that their overarching concern
was liberty, an idea that gets little attention today -- apart from
conservatives, constitutionalists and tea party patriots.

What constitutionalists understand is that upholding the integrity
of the Constitution and its designed system of limited government is
essential to preserving our liberties, and usurpations of power by all
three branches of government and by an out-of-control, unaccountable
administrative bureaucracy have imperiled them. Constitutionalists abhor
abuses of power by any and all branches, irrespective of the substantive
political agenda being served by such usurpations.

When King Josiah found a copy of the Jewish law in the Temple,
which was being restored in 621 B.C., he was mortified by the extent to
which the nation had departed from its teachings. He called for
rededication to the law and a revival of its presence in the lives of the
people.

Mark Levin is a modern-day constitutional prophet whose purpose is
not to revamp the Constitution. It is to revive it and refurbish it -- to
restore the cracks in its foundation caused by lawless officials through
the years who were more interested in guaranteeing outcomes than they were
liberty.

The goal of every one of Mark's proposed amendments is to restore
the delicate balances the Framers originally designed; it is to restate
and revivify the system of limited government they established by
replacing bricks in specific places in our constitutional foundation --
bricks that statists have forcibly dislodged over time.

The sagacious and prescient Framers knew that no matter how well
they crafted the Constitution, no matter what kind of protections it
included, it would always be vulnerable to the abuses of lawless men who
simply refuse to honor its provisions. They also understood that
experience would enlighten their successors as to possible pitfalls and
weaknesses in the framework that could be breached by such scofflaws over
time, so they provided specific methods for amending the Constitution to
shore up those trouble spots -- always keeping in mind that preserving
liberty was the greatest imperative.

Today's statists have no regard for the Constitution or rule of
law and have severely weakened it in many places, and as a result, our
liberty, our prosperity and our very nation are in decline and in grave
jeopardy.

Mark Levin is calling on us to take corrective steps -- through a
process anticipated and expressly sanctioned by the Framers, no less -- to
restore our system and reinvigorate our liberties. Let's pray his effort
becomes an inexorable movement that sweeps the nation like the Great
Awakening.